By Abhishek Shanker - Nov 21, 2011 1:31 AM GMT+0700
India’s federal investigators indicted telecommunications carriers Vodafone India Ltd. and Bharti Airtel Ltd. (BHARTI) and conducted searches in a probe into alleged irregularities in allocations of mobile-phone airwaves.
Central Bureau of Investigation registered a case against three private cellular companies and two government officials for alleged irregularities in the grant of additional second- generation spectrum, causing a loss of about 5.1 billion rupees ($100 million) during 2001-2007, it said on its website.
Spokesmen at Bharti Airtel, India’s biggest mobile-phone company, and Vodafone India, unit of Vodafone Group Plc (VOD), confirmed the searches. The bureau also searched residences of Shyamal Ghosh, the telecom secretary in the federal government during 2001-02, and J.R. Gupta, then director at state-owned telecom company Bharat Sanchar Nigam Ltd., according to Dharini Mishra, a spokeswoman at the bureau.
The probe seeks information about possible malpractice in allocating spectrum during 2001-02 when Pramod Mahajan was the telecom minister under the National Democratic Alliance government led by Bhartiya Janta Party, the main opposition in the current government, Mishra said. Mahajan has been excluded from the case since he died, the bureau said.
“All our documents are in complete compliance with the governing laws and regulations,” Suresh Rangarajan, spokesman at Vodafone, said in an e-mailed statement on Nov. 19. “Vodafone India is completely co-operating with the officials and will provide them all the required details as part of their checks.”
‘Criminal Conspiracy’
Bharti Airtel’s spokesman Prem Subedi said the company secured all spectrum blocks as per the government policy.
“It has been alleged that the then-secretary in the ministry and another official entered into a criminal conspiracy with three beneficiary private companies and abused their official positions as public servants,” the agency’s statement said. “The public servants, with approval of the then minister of telecom took an alleged hurried decision on Jan. 31, 2002 to allocate additional spectrum beyond 6.2 megahertz in violation of the report of a technical committee.”
In a separate probe, India’s chief auditor said last year that former minister Andimuthu Raja in the Congress-led government and others conspired to grant licenses to unqualified companies for personal benefit, reducing state revenues by as much as $31 billion. The CBI put the loss at 220 billion rupees ($4.3 billion)
Investor Confidence
The scandal has weakened Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s government, lowered investor confidence in the economy, paralyzed legislation in parliament and sparked nationwide street protests.
The government is cracking down on corruption as it’s under pressure from social activists and opposition parties to curb official graft and make a stronger anti-corruption law. The government may seek lawmakers’ approval for such a law in its winter session from Nov. 22 to Dec. 21.
“The government is only trying to use its powers to find answers for some tough questioning on corruption issues in the upcoming parliament session,” said N. Bhaskara Rao, chairman of the Centre for Media Studies. “It has no inkling in solving the issue and regaining investors’ confidence.”
To contact the reporter on this story: Abhishek Shanker in Mumbai at ashanker1@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Jim McDonald at jmcdonald8@bloomberg.net
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